Tag: APC

  • Move Ijaw to APC now, Eradiri tells Diri, Dickson

    Move Ijaw to APC now, Eradiri tells Diri, Dickson

    A former Labour Party governorship candidate in Bayelsa State, Udengs Eradiri, has called on the state governor, Douye Diri, and his predecessor, Senator Henry Seriake Dickson, to integrate the Ijaw nation into the government at the centre.

    Eradiri, in a statement on Wednesday, told the two political leaders that there is no better time than now to move the Ijaw nation into the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Describing the current period as the time of political realignment, Eradiri, who is a Fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineering (NSE), said the Ijaw could experience political alienation if the leaders failed to adapt to the political reality.

    He specifically said Diri and Dickson should decisively join the APC to create the required opportunity for the Ijaw to play crucial roles in the corridors of power.

    Eradiri, a former President of the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC) Worldwide, argued that taking such a political decision would attract more infrastructural and manpower development.

    He insisted that the Ijaw would gain nothing by being in opposition to the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, but would only be left to wallow in the political wilderness.

    He appealed to Diri and Dickson to forego personal interest, LS, and see the bigger picture, insisting that their joining the APC would be for the overall interest of the Ijaw nation.

    Eradiri, a former Commissioner for Youths and later Environment in Bayelsa, reminded the two leaders that their past political fathers, living and dead, used to align with any government at the centre.

    Eradiri said, “The time for political realignment for the Ijaw Nation is now.

    The current political equation in Nigeria presently will alienate the Ijaw race if we don’t re-strategise immediately and take a decision to join the ruling party.

    “I am calling on Senator Seriake Dickson and Governor Douye Diri to join the APC now to guarantee the Ijaw Nation a place in decision-making at the centre.

    Read Also: Security: Diri lauds agencies, armed forces team for synergy

    “This is no longer the time for bravado. There is nothing or no point in being in opposition to President Tinubu’s government, as it will only alienate Ijaws politically.

    “Our fathers had always aligned with the centre, and Ijaws, no matter how bad, had always had some say in government. But today we have no voice in the APC-led federal government.

    “Dickson, being a former governor and now senator, and Douye Diri, a former senator and now governor, will give the Ijaws a voice at the national government if they heed this clarion call and move to the APC.

    “I, however, call on them to jettison every personal interest and other selfish sentiments and take this step, which I believe will be for the overall interest of the Ijaw nation.

    “Ijaws cannot be onlookers. Our resources sustain Nigeria, so we must be strategic to advance the development of Bayelsa and the Ijaw nation”.

  • Ondo APC chair abducted

    Ondo APC chair abducted

    Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ward Five, Ose Local Government Area of Ondo State, Nelson Adepoyigi, has been kidnapped.

    Adepoyigi was abducted on Ifon-Owo highway.

    Ondo Police spokesman, Ayanlade Olayinka Olushola, who confirmed the abduction, said a manhunt had been launched for the release of the victim.

    Read Also: Sule: I remain loyal to President, committed to APC

    Olushola said: “I can confirm to you that the chairman APC Ward 5 was kidnapped at the entrance of his farm along Ifon-Owo Road.

    “At the receipt of the report the DPO Ifon in collaboration with the hunters , local VGN and Nigeria Army personnel have launched a manhunt for the suspects.”

  • Epe council boss hails APC leadership

    Epe council boss hails APC leadership

    The Chairman of Epe Local Government Area of Lagos State, Princess Surah Animashaun, has commended the people of the Epe local government council for renewing her mandate at the just-concluded All Progressives Congress (APC) local government primary election, just as she said that “Power belongs to God.”

    Princess Animashaun described her victory at the APC primary election as heart-warming, and “further proof that no man can play God or stop what God has ordained.”

    The chairman, in her statement, said though the primary election was keenly contested, her emergence at the primary came to her as a sign of good faith and a vote of confidence in her administration by the people, assuring that her second term would usher in more goodies of democracy.

    She said her victory is a further challenge to deliver on the manifesto of the All Progressives Congress (APC), even as she promised that she would continue with the government of inclusiveness that has been the hallmark of her administration in the last four years.

    Read Also: Agege APC leaders deny imposition of candidates in party’s primary 

    Commending the delegates for conducting themselves in a peaceful manner during the primary, Princess Animashaun equally lauded the APC delegates, including its leadership, members, security agencies, the media and other relevant stakeholders for ensuring an atmosphere which enabled peaceful primary elections.

    Princess Animashaun also thanked the party leaders, stalwarts and members of the APC in the LG and state, who worked assiduously for the party primary election, assuring them that she would continue to keep the flag of the party flying, by continuing to deliver good governance across the local government council.

    She said, “To God be all the glory for the divine grace and favour that granted me victory at the APC primary election, securing my candidacy as the party’s flagbearer for the forthcoming local government elections in Epe local government council area.

    “This triumph is a reflection of our collective desire for continuity, progress, and the unwavering trust reposed in me by the good people of Epe and its environs.

    “I want to thank all the good people of Epe for this mandate, all my appointees, all my personal friends for their consistent support and prayers, particularly as we prepare for local government election in the state.

  • APC takes majority in Senate to 68

    APC takes majority in Senate to 68

    • Three Kebbi senators defect

    Yesterday’s defection of three Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senators from Kebbi State into the All Progressives Congress (APC) has taken the ruling party’s majority to 68 members in the Red Chamber.

    The three senators – Adamu Aliero (Kebbi Central), Yahaya Abdullahi (Kebbi North) and Garba Maidoki (Kebbi South) – dumped their party for the APC at plenary.

    The trio on Friday visited President Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the Villa in Abuja to finalise the defection plan.

    But the PDP in Kebbi State chapter said the exit of the senators would in no way affect its fortune in the Northwest State.

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Kebbi State has said that the defection of the senators will not reduce its strength or prospects in the state.

    They are the latest lawmakers to dump the main opposition party for the APC.

    The defections reduced the number of PDP senators to 30.

    Trailing the PDP is the Labour Party (LP) with five senators, Social Democratic Party (SDP) with two members. The New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) have one senator apiece.

    Two seats from Edo and Anambra are vacant following the election of Monday Okpebholo (Edo Central) as governor and the demise of Anambra South Senator Ifeanyi Mbah.

    Aliero, a former minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and onetime governor of the state, in a letter read on the floor of the Senate, said his decision followed “deep reflection, extensive consultations and careful assessment” of the political and socio-economic realities of the country and his constituency.

    “I have made the decision to formally resign my membership of the PDP and rejoin the APC, of which I was a founding member.

    “Politics must never be about personal loyalty to a platform. It will always be about service, solutions and results.

    “The PDP has become disconnected from the aspirations of the very Nigerians it seeks to lead,” he said, blaming the party’s internal divisions and lack of ideological clarity.

    He expressed renewed confidence in the APC’s leadership, describing it as “a more viable platform through which I can effectively serve my constituents.”

    Senator Abdullahi, former Senate Leader and Senator Maidoki echoed similar sentiments.

    Abdullahi in his letter, described his return to the APC as a “homecoming,” noting that the issues that led to his initial exit from the party in 2022 had been resolved by the current the governor.

    “I believe it is in the best interest of the constituency that I represent to take this step. It is politically imperative for me to join President Bola Tinubu by providing my legislative knowledge and experience to support the efforts that the President is making in reinventing Nigeria.”

    Reacting to the defections, the leadership of the Senate dismissed arguments that members of the opposition were moving to the ruling APC to avoid prosecution or for other sinister interests.

    Deputy Senate President Jibrin Barau, Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele and Edo North Senator Adams Oshiomhole, in their separate comments, noted that such defections are not strange in a democratic setting.

    Bamidele said: “No one is being coerced. If anyone will be coerced, definitely it is not Senator Aliero, it is not Prof Yahaya Abdulahi that will be coerced. Neither is it Senator Maidoki who had also made a mark at the private sector before he came into politics to replicate the same feat.”

    Read Also: Senate seeks deployment of adequate troops to northeast to curb Boko Haram resurgence

    The Deputy Senate President who congratulated President Tinubu and the APC National Chairman, Abdullahi Ganduje, who was present at the Red Chamber to witness the defections, described the influx of defectors into the ruling party as an indication that both the President and the party chairman are working well.

    He said: “Let me congratulate the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria for this very big gain by the ruling party. Congratulation also goes to the national chairman of the party for this gain. Of course, he and the President have been working together and we have seen the results in the number of people coming to the party.

    “It’s just a sign that the government is doing well and that’s why people are attracted because of the performance of the government.

    “So, all we need to tell Mr. President is that we commend what he’s doing. We also commend the government of Kebbi State the presence of your governor here shows that you are working in harmony with your people.”

    Oshiomhole, who reacted to the defection on a television programme last night, dismissed concerns that the APC’s two-thirds majority in the National Assembly poses a threat to democracy.

    He emphasized that the influx of defectors will not in any way stifle robust and objective parliamentary debates.

    The former Edo governor said: “Whether this is dangerous for democracy, I don’t think so. If you follow debates in the House, sometimes you can’t distinguish between PDP or the APC. It depends on the position people take. The diversity of Nigeria is better served at the national level because every interest is represented.”

    With Ganduje to witness the defections were Kebbi Governor Mohammed Nasir Idris; former Kebbi governor Saidu Dakingari; Minister of State for Humanitarian Affairs, Yusuf Sununu; Senator Uche Ekwunife; Farouk Lawan and the Secretary to the Kebbi State Government among others.

  • BREAKING: Three Kebbi senators formally defect to APC

    BREAKING: Three Kebbi senators formally defect to APC

    The three senators from Kebbi State on Tuesday officially defected from the Peoples Democracy Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC) on the floor of the Senate.

    Senators Adamu Aliero (Kebbi Central), Yahaya Abdullahi (Kebbi North) and Garba Maidoki (Kebbi South), are the latest lawmakers to dump the PDP for the APC following a wave of defections that has hit the party.

    The defection of Aliero, Abdullahi, Maidoki brings the number of senators on the platform of the APC in the 10th Senate to 68 while the PDP dropped to 30 members from 33.

    In the current composition of the Nigerian Senate, the All Progressives Congress (APC) leads with 68 members, followed by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which holds 30 seats.

    Read Also: Lagos APC gets Election Appeal Committee

    Other political parties represented include the Labour Party (LP) with five senators, the Social Democratic Party (SDP) with two, while the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) have one senator each.

    Meanwhile, two seats remain vacant following the death of Senator Ifeanyi Ubah, who represented Anambra South, and the emergence of Senator Monday Okpebholo, the former representative of Edo Central, as the new Governor of Edo State.

    Details shortly….

  • 2027: I remain loyal to President Tinubu, committed to APC – Sule

    2027: I remain loyal to President Tinubu, committed to APC – Sule

    Nasarawa State Governor, Abdullahi Sule, has clarified that the state under his leadership remains loyal and committed to the second term bid of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Governor Sule, who stated this in a statement made available to our correspondent on Monday in Lafia, signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Ibrahim Addra, responded to the chairman of the North Central APC Forum, Alhaji Saleh Zazagga, who described Sule’s actions as a double game regarding Tinubu’s second term bid in 2027.

    The statement noted that while the governor’s office respects the right to political discourse and rarely responds to every noise, it has become necessary to react to Mr. Zazagga’s diatribe because it is riddled with inaccuracies, deliberate misrepresentations, and a glaring disconnect from the facts.

    “Governor Sule has consistently demonstrated his commitment to President Tinubu’s administration since its inception. His recent remarks at the event organised by the ALGON in Nasarawa State and friends of the new SSG, Labaran Shuaibu Magaji (PhD), were neither a contradiction of the efforts of those encouraging all the former CPC members to remain in APC nor an endorsement of division.

    “Rather, the governor’s reference to former president Muhammadu Buhari as the undisputed and symbolic leader of the defunct CPC bloc was a historical fact, not a political slight. So, His Excellency, Governor Sule, is neither a favour seeker nor want any recognition from anyone.

    “If the writer now claims that former President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, is not the undisputed leader of the CPC block in APC, he then owes the public and loyal party members a duty to clarify or justify the same rather than beating around the bush.

    “It is public knowledge that Buhari, as the founder of the CPC, remains a respected figure whose influence transcends factions.

    “Governor Sule’s call for unity, including his appeal to former AGF and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami to remain in the APC, was a strategic push to consolidate all legacy blocs under the APC umbrella. This aligns perfectly with President Tinubu’s vision of a broad-based, inclusive party. To insinuate that Governor Sule is “against” Tinubu because he acknowledged Buhari’s historical role is not only illogical but a deliberate distortion of context.

    “The group’s attempt to pitch Governor Sule against Senator Al-makura, his predecessor and political ally, is disingenuous. Both leaders have worked collaboratively to redefine governance under the umbrella of the APC in Nasarawa State and beyond.

    Governor Sule’s statement that “only President Buhari can truly decide for the CPC” was a pragmatic recognition of the former president’s unique position as the bloc’s founder. To claim otherwise is to ignore the nuance of intra-party dynamics. This is a fact known by those who understand how CPC was formed.

    “The governor’s focus remains on ensuring that all factions, including those loyal to President Buhari, remain firmly within the APC fold, a goal that directly benefits the APC.

    Read Also: Sule splashes N2 million on Nasarawa United  after  Lobi win

    The Forum’s allegation that Governor Sule “opposed” President Tinubu’s tax reforms is a gross misrepresentation and lacking knowledge of happenings in the country.

     “Governor Sule only defended the position of the Northern Governors and Traditional Rulers, and thank God that both Mr. President and the National Assembly accepted the position of the Northern Governors. Those who are competent to understand what really happened are full of praise for the Governor and his colleagues.

    “To attract investment to Nasarawa State, His Excellency has always supported policies that stimulate economic growth, which is in line with President Tinubu’s long-term vision.

    “We urge Alhaji Saleh Zazagga and his group to retract their divisive claims and partner with patriotic stakeholders in advancing the APC’s collective interests.

    “The era of politics of deceit and illiteracy is long gone, as those in authority understand the game better. Unity and constructive engagement, not divisive rhetoric, will secure victory for the APC in 2027, and no one understands it better than our leader, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR.” The statement concluded 

  • APC leaders reject alleged imposition of LCDA chairmanship candidate in Lagos

    APC leaders reject alleged imposition of LCDA chairmanship candidate in Lagos

    Leaders and stakeholders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Yaba Local Council Development Area (LCDA) have rejected the alleged imposition of Bayo Adefuye as the party’s chairmanship candidate for the upcoming local government elections.

    In a formal protest letter addressed to the Chairman of the APC Electoral Committee, Hon. Babatunde Ogala, SAN, the group described the move as “undemocratic, provocative, and a clear affront to the will of the people.”

    The letter was jointly signed by ward representatives across all nine wards in Yaba LCDA, including Domingo Babajide (Ward A), Kemi Aboyarin (Ward B), Adediran Olorunnimbe (Ward C), Taoreed Abiona (Ward D), Alani Ifatokun (Ward E), Oladunjoye Omoniyi (Ward F), Olaofe Fatai (Ward G), Idayat Abdul Rasaq (Ward H), and Shakiru Adebowale (Ward I).

    The signatories, who identified themselves as the Apex Leadership of the APC in Yaba, warned that the alleged imposition could severely damage party unity, erode grassroots support, and threaten the APC’s credibility and electoral success in the area.

    They urged the party leadership to uphold internal democracy and respect the will of the people, stressing that any attempt to force a candidate on the party risks provoking unrest and disenchantment among loyal members.

    Read Also: APC group demands review of Lagos LG primary election result, alleges fraud

    “Yaba LCDA is not a private estate to be passed from father to son,” the leaders wrote, stressing that Adefuye lacks the political roots and community involvement in Yaba to justify his candidacy.

    Among the reasons cited for the opposition were Adefuye’s prior political engagement in Shomolu/Bariga, his recent reappointment to the Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) as a representative of Shomolu/Bariga, and his lack of permanent residence or verifiable community involvement in Yaba.

    The leaders also argued that qualified and long-standing APC members in Yaba, some with over 30 years of community service, have signalled interest in the position and should not be sidelined for an outsider.

    They further reminded Senator Adefuye of his 2019 stance when he opposed a candidate with maternal ties to Shomolu, insisting he contest in his paternal base, calling for similar consistency now.

    The letter urged the party’s leadership to urgently intervene and halt what they termed “an external imposition,” warning that failure to do so could have damaging consequences on the party’s unity and prospects in future elections.

  • APC group demands review of Lagos LG primary election result, alleges fraud

    APC group demands review of Lagos LG primary election result, alleges fraud

    A group of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, the Ebony Campaign Team, has urged party leaders to revisit the outcome of the recently declared local government primary election.

    The group alleged widespread fraud and injustice, claiming that available evidence shows its candidate, Ìdòwu Daramola, won the primary for the Odi-Olowo-Ojuwoye Local Council Development Area.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Morufdeen Bello, the team accused some party elements of plotting to impose an unpopular candidate, warning that such moves could damage the party’s chances in the area.

    The group called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, and members of the Governor’s Advisory Council (GAC) to urgently intervene, noting that the situation is already heightening tensions in the community.

    “The recently conducted APC primary election of Odi-Olowo /Ojuwoye LCDA at the APC Lagos state office premises in Acme is a display of electoral malpractices of the highest order. 

    “It is disgraceful, shameful, unprecedented and a brazen attempt to impose an unpopular aspirant on our people. 

    “The announced results is a predetermined outcome far from the realities of the day and the true outcome of the election. This illogical, day light fraud is unacceptable and undemocratic 

    “Declaring that Hon. Idowu Daramola (Ebony)scored zero is not only laughable and a reverse of the truth, it is totally unacceptable. 

    In a statement by Morufdeen Bello, Spokesperson, Ebony Campaign Team, the group questioned: “How can Hon. Idowu Daramola who scored 17 votes out of 25 was said to score zero?, adding that the question begs for a logical answer.

    Read Also: Who becomes APC chairman in Ondo?

    “Scoring Hon. Idowu Daramola zero is a travesty of justice, an affront to logic, and an insult to the intelligence of the good people and delegates of Odi-Olowo /Ojuwoye LCDA . 

    ‘That the delegates in their majority rejected the one who has been in office for eight years is a testament to Hon. Idowu Daramola’s popularity, acceptance and the desire of our people for a new dawn. 

    “This disgraceful and shameful display of repeated desperation must stop in Odi-Olowo /Ojuwoye LCDA. 

    “When will our people have a government of their own, when will this imposition and illegality stop in Odi-Olowo / Ojuwoye LCDA?

    According to Bello, the same people who undermined the electoral value of Daramola and plotted to silence him, are now sending emissaries to him.

    To the campaign team, this is nothing but betrayal and suppression of the people’s will. 

    “In truth, they are the betrayals. They deny our people their rights, they don’t fulfill promises, they have an history of not following agreements and they practice winner takes all. 

    “And now that the people pay them back by voting an honest, diligent, popular and acceptable Hon. Idowu Daramola, they are now crying about like bush babies. 

    ‘This electoral fallacy have shown utter desperation to silence Hon. Idowu Daramola aspirations, it is intended to crush the will of his supporters and delegates, and to undermine a democratic process. We refused to be silenced! We will not be intimidated! We will not be deterred! We will not relent until justice is served and seen to have been done! 

    Bello added that there are facts that 17 delegates voted for Daramola, alleging that the announced result was nothing but fraud.

    “Scoring him zero is a testament to their desperation. This is a clear case of electoral manipulation, designed to impose a predetermined outcome.

    “We have our delegates who are willing and ready to prove that zero to Hon. Idowu Daramola was allotment and not the actual votes. Rather, he won the election.”  

    Appealing to party leaders, the team said: “We therefore appeal to our national leader who doubles as the President of the Federal Republic, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Governor of Lagos State Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, the GAC leaders to prevail on the electoral committee to investigate what happened behind close doors before the counting of ballots. 

    We call for the

    “We also want Immediate reversal of the primary results

    “There should be immediate announcement of the original results where Daramola won the primaries election. 

    “We appeal that the party do all it can to flush out electoral fraud and its promoters from our party at all cost. The continuos embarrassment of our party must stop.”

    The group vowed to fight on until justice is served.

    “Until justice is served, until Hon. Idowu Daramola’s right as the winner is recognized, and until the will of the people and delegates is upheld, we will agitate, and we will demand justice.

    “Our voices must be heard and our outrage and anger against this day light and disgraceful act must be seen! 

    “This time around, we won’t relent. The party leaders must not only do justice but must be seen to have done it.”

  • Muslim community rejects religious politics, backs APC candidate

    Muslim community rejects religious politics, backs APC candidate

    The Muslim community in Somolu Local Government of Lagos State has disowned a controversial letter rejecting All Progressives Congress (APC) chairmanship candidate over his Christian faith. The letter, which circulated on social media, had sparked outrage and fears of religious tension in the cosmopolitan Lagos suburb.

    In a swift response, Muslim leaders in Somolu gathered at the Central Mosque, clarifying that the purported rejection does not reflect their sentiments. The community affirmed its support for APC candidate, regardless of his religious background. “We have not come for a fight. We are for peace,” the leaders said. “We support the choice of the party for the chairmanship candidate.”

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    Rejecting attempts to stoke division along religious lines, the leaders stressed that leadership should be based on competence, record, and commitment to the people—not faith. They accused those who allegedly authored the letter of politicising religion. “These individuals surface during elections, using religion as a political weapon,” one elder said. “They are not speaking for us.”

    Instead, the community praised Christian aspirants supporting the Muslim population in Somolu through mosque renovations, education scholarships, and healthcare interventions. “We judge people by their actions, not just their religion,” an elder commented. “The strength of Somolu lies in our unity, and we will not allow anyone to destroy that.”

    In a resounding message to political actors, the group urged all stakeholders to focus on development, youth empowerment, and social welfare, rather than sowing seeds of division. “Somolu Muslims are for peace,” the leaders reiterated. “We will continue to support policies and candidates that promote progress, regardless of religious background.”

  • APC, April showers and May flowers

    APC, April showers and May flowers

    April showers bring May flowers.” This climatic-cum-horticultural English proverb is significant for Nigeria’s developing political story. Incidentally, we’re currently in the April-May weather nexus, and the proverb is metaphorically relevant for the current state of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The party was formed on 6 February, 2013 from a merger of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), General Muhammadu Buhari’s Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), and part of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). Thereafter, a group of members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) called “New PDP”, including former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, defected to APC.

    In this column on 17 November, 2024, in an article titled “Nigeria’s somnolent opposition,” it was shown how the country’s opposition parties seemed to have been in slumber due to, among other reasons, the victory of APC in the 28 March, 2015 presidential elections. Now, it seems that the opposition have woken up, but have done so on the wrong side of the bed, resulting in their befogged perception of the state of the nation’s politics.

    This befuddlement is manifested in the tendency to see the opposition’s different woes as caused by malevolent agents of the ruling APC. So, rather than face their own demons, the opposition and their sympathisers have been blaming APC for striving to create a one-party state. Even the Social Democratic Party, which is itself already receiving defectors, has joined the opposition bandwagon of offloading their problems on to the APC.

    Ironically, it has been APC’s President Tinubu who, since 18 December, 2023, has been making widely-acknowledged efforts to resolve the crisis between the PDP’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Nyesom Wike, the PDP’s now-suspended Governor Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers State, and the suspended PDP legislature. Moreover, Wike said in a media parley on 18 April, 2025: “Two governors under APC … came to talk to me, and I said, ‘Look, I’m not the governor, I’m FCT Minister. … I said, look, I’m here for peace. What does he [Fubara] want? … And they said, ‘We’ll do everything to make [peace happen].’”

    According to Britannica, a one-party state is “a country where a single political party controls the government, either by law or in practice. Examples of one-party states include North Korea, China, Eritrea, and Cuba.” With the constitution declaring the country as a multiparty democracy, with the multiplicity of parties in the nation’s legislatures and with multifarious parties running different states and local governments, Nigeria is neither a one-party state by law nor in practice, and its prospects of becoming one are farfetched. Indeed, the current unfettered, publicly-dramatised attempts to cobble together an opposition coalition to wrest power from APC in 2027 are inconsistent with the movement towards a one-party state.

    Read Also: Council poll: Lagos APC primaries produce four consensus candidates

    April 2025’s dizzying torrent of defections to APC from different opposition parties show that, as the English proverb says, “It never rains but it pours.” And the one-party phantom in the country seems to be the escapist excuse of politicians who have shirked their responsibility for stabilising, reforming or rebuilding their parties, but who still want to sleep easy. The accusation of working to establish a one-party state is also a ready weapon in the arsenal of APC’s political detractors, and has become a self-deluding form of political denigration.

    For some, the motive for defecting is the attraction of being part of the winning team; for some it is the desire to benefit from inducement; for some it is the need to seek refuge; and for some, it is primarily existential, with respect to the survival of their political careers. The conflict bedeviling the different opposition parties are of importance in this regard, especially concerning those who look forward to contesting elections into executive or legislative offices between now and 2027.

    The Secretary of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) sent a reminder to political parties on the procedures for submitting nominations of candidates for the 2013 Anambra State governorship election as follows: “a) Every political party shall submit the list of the candidates the party proposes to sponsor in Form CF 002 duly signed by the National Chairman and National Secretary of the Political Party. b) The list shall be accompanied with a covering letter duly signed by the National Chairman and National Secretary of the Political Party.”

    As Nyesom Wike alerts, these subsisting INEC procedures put at risk of improper nomination a candidate in whose party there is controversy about who the legitimate National Chairman or National Secretary is. And this is not speculative, as was shown in the relatable Zamfara State APC crises of the recent past. Some members of the party successfully challenged in court the legitimacy of all of the party’s candidates for all of the positions for which they contested, on the ground of improper nomination.

    This is the way the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room reported the matter on 28 May, 2019: “After a protracted legal tussle, the Supreme Court Friday, 24th May 2019, delivered a judgment nullifying the victory of all Candidates of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Zamfara State in the 2019 General elections. APC Candidates who had been declared winners of thirty-six elective positions in the State, comprising the Governorship, National and State Assembly positions have lost their seats to Candidates of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), who were the first runners-up in the elections. Describing the votes scored by APC in the State as a waste, the Court held that the party did not conduct primaries in Zamfara State and as such, could not field Candidates in the General elections.”    

    In an 8 May, 2025 interview on TVC News, the Leader of the Labour Party Caucus in the House of Representatives, Hon. Afam Ogene, noted with respect to defectors from his party: “And why are they defecting? They are not sure that the Labour Party offers a credible platform to run elections and sustain it. They don’t want a situation [as] happened in Plateau State to happen where they will go for primaries, campaign, win elections, only to be told by the courts that this man has been long thrown overboard as Chairman of the party. And that is why they are seeking their political fortunes elsewhere.” For this, you can’t blame the receiving or ruling party. Even babies don’t spit out honey.

     Considering the gale of defections into APC, the Acting National Chairman of PDP – Ambassador Umar Damagum – and PDP chief Segun Sowunmi warn that APC faces the risk of implosion. Though this counsel comes from opposition sources that cannot easily be said to wish APC well, it is invaluable in the sense that it nudges the party not to lose sight of the fact that even dry land may be slippery. Another Yoruba idiom similarly admonishes: “Acquiring too many friends leads to acquiring treacherous friends.” (“Àyànjù òré tíí mú’ni yan èké.”). It is also believed that the size of the head determines the intensity of its headache. (“Bí orí bá se tóbi tó níí se fó olórí.”) The message here is that grace has pains.

    This brings us to the APC’s Oyo State sore thumb. Oyo State was a solid APC domain. Its troubles in the state started with what some members regarded as the imposition of governorship candidate for the 2019 election. Taking offence at what was believed to be this perverse treatment, some of the other aspirants defected to other parties, and some stayed on but worked against the party. Consequently, APC lost the gubernatorial election to PDP in the state that year.

    History repeated itself in APC’s primary elections for the 2023 elections. The primaries were believed to have been grossly manipulated and some disaffected candidates and members of the party defected from the party. Some even contested the elections on the platform of other parties. Some of those who did not defect worked against the party from within. So, with this protest, complemented by PDP’s incumbency factor, APC lost the governorship election again. The 2027 governorship election would be the third consecutive one. Will APC work to lose again this time around? There’s already grumbling in the air, and APC needs to act right before the grumble becomes a rumble.

    There is also the problem of the zonal dominance of source of governorship candidates in Oyo State. There are five geo-political zones in the state. These are: Oke-Ogun 1 (with Iseyin, Kajola, Iwajowa, and Itesiwaju Local Governments) and Oke-Ogun 2 (with Atisbo, Saki-West, Saki-East, Oorelope, Irepo and Olorunsogo Local Governments), Ogbomoso zone (with Ori-Ire, Ogbomoso North, Ogbomoso South, Surulere and Ogo Oluwa Local Governments), Oyo zone (with Atiba, Oyo West, Oyo East and Afijio Local Governments), Ibarapa zone (with Ibarapa North, Ibarapa East and Ibarapa Central Local Governments), and Ibadan zone (with Ido, Akinyele, Lagelu, Ibadan North, Ibadan North-East, Ibadan North-West, Ibadan South-East, Ibadan South-West, Egbeda, Ona Ara and Oluyole Local Governments).

    Of these five zones, with the exception of Ogbomoso, all of the civilian governors of the present Oyo State, since its creation on 27 August, 1991, have hailed from the Ibadan zone. Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde put this problem in perspective in a 15 April, 2025 Channels Television interview. Asked by Seun Okinbaloye which zone of Oyo State his successor would come from, he replied: “Politics is a game of numbers. … Still at this particular time, about almost 50% of the population of Oyo State is still domiciled within Ibadan.”

    Governor Makinde continued: “However, well before I became a governor, I told them that the only way the governorship would leave Ibadan is when you have a governor that has performed excellently well, that has had the trust of the people, and if he’s able to find a successor from any zone, then he can push that through. We’re still on this journey. I don’t know if we have … 100% trust from people just yet, but if we focus on what we’re doing, by the end of this year, we will definitely hear what people are saying.”

    Propositions have been made for a constitutional review to stipulate the rotation of presidential candidacy between the different zones of the country, governorship candidacy between the different senatorial districts of a state, and chairmanship candidacy between different parts of a local government. This is the time to give these equitable proposals impetus to facilitate the accommodation of diversity, boost faith in the political system and enhance socio-political stability.

    As has been shown in Nigeria and Botswana, dominant parties don’t last in ascendancy out of sheer size. They last due to methodical politics. Meanwhile, let APC, blessed with April showers of defection, continue to enjoy its May flowers – its increasing chances of victory in the 2027 elections.